Tag Archives: Human resources

top 10 ways to motivate employees

18 Jul
List of orders, decorations, and medals of the...

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Top tips for getting the most out of your team startups.co.uk 15th July 2011

Staff morale is more difficult to measure than sales or margins, but is equally important. Unhappy employees are likely to be unproductive employees so the mental wellbeing and happiness of your staff is crucial for your business’ success. Not addressing this now could be expensive for your company later – either through an inefficient workforce or high staff turnover. However, fostering job satisfaction doesn’t have to cost the earth. Startups spoke to a panel of entrepreneurs to find out their top tips for motivating staff.

1) Treat everyone as an individual

Respect that different employees have different needs. “Every incentive doesn’t necessarily motivate every individual,” says Andrew Backhouse, national contract director at Timothy James, a 2010 winner of The Sunday Times 100 Best SMEs to work for. Get to know each member of staff and show you understand them by being flexible to their personal situations. For example, if an employee is in a long distance relationship, you may want to let them leave early on Friday afternoons. As a result, they’ll be more inclined to put extra hours in during the week to keep on top of their workload.

2) Praise good work and offer feedback

“We believe in public praise. When someone does a good job, we congratulate them in front of everyone,” says Bradley Placks, co-founder of MyResourcer. Regular feedback and encouragement makes employees feel positive – and that will be invested back in to your business. It is important to be genuine, so find something that has impressed you, even if it is as simple as an employee’s presentation, and let them know that they are doing it well. Following employee demand, some companies have introduced six monthly appraisals. This offers a good opportunity to encourage staff, clarify any issues, and re-establish with the employee their expectations of the company and your expectations of them.

3) Lead by example

A productive team needs a productive leader. As the top dog you need to embody the company’s brand yourself and be true to its ethics. However equally important is that employees see you putting in as much energy as them – if not more. “If you always slope off early on a Friday, these small messages have a huge impact on your staff, undermining any formal messages of motivation that you are trying to get across,” says Adrian Moorhouse, managing director of Lane4. “A good leader needs to lead by example, by role-modelling the behaviours that are expected of staff. Be excited by new challenges, show real enthusiasm for projects and demonstrate your love of the job. Positivity breeds positivity.”

4) Encourage people to take a break

Whilst an employee who doesn’t optimise their annual leave might seem like a good deal for your business, everyone needs to take a break in order to operate at their full potential. Approach people who haven’t used their holiday entitlement and encourage them to get away. This will also show employees that you care about their wellbeing. Similarly, some organisations allow employees a few days a year to engage with the community. Michelle Fuller and Chris Russell, co-founders of eDigitalResearch, run a Personal Development Week for their team. “Every employee gets the opportunity to expand their skill set or get stuck in at charity events, to help with their personal development.”

5) Offer benefits that boost morale (but don’t break the bank)

Sometimes it is the little things that count. While large organisations may be able to offer corporate holidays in sunny climes, a gesture as simple as having fruit delivered to the office each week can show employees that you care. Tailor benefits to your workforce. You could bring a masseuse in once a month to give each employee a 10 minute boost, organise a team activity afternoon or a barbeque. “Events don’t have to be expensive, just well-planned and thought out,” says Damian Milkins, CEO of Control Circle.

Where possible, invite staff to bring their partners as well. “Having a good relationship with people’s partners really helps,” says Simon Corbett, founder of Jargon PR. “All those times when people stay late, instead of getting home to an earful, they get a much more sympathetic response.”

6) Give ownership to your team

While new employees need clear instructions and guidance, once they are on the right track, let go of the reins. Leave them to be led by their own initiative and congratulate them for doing so. “Allow them to work well and without much input. It’s the little things that give ownership to teams and allow them to feel trusted and motivated,” says Dominic Monkhouse, managing director of PEER 1 Hosting and a former consultant for The Sunday Times 100 Best Companies to work for. As well as inspiring self-confidence, this hands-off approach may allow employees to navigate your firm from a new perspective, potentially exposing inefficiencies, untapped opportunities and prospective innovations.

7) Run a ‘no blame’ culture

“When something goes wrong don’t blame the person; analyse the reasons and change whatever actually caused the issue in the first place – learn and improve,” says John Sollars, founder of Stinkyink.com. If you are always pointing the finger, employees will feel tense, which can restrict initiative and innovation. Even if an employee has committed a serious offence, take it as an opportunity to review your recruitment process. It may be that you are not asking the right questions at interview.

8) Communication is key

By keeping open lines of communication with employees and listening to their ideas, they will feel more connected to the progression of the business and thus more motivated to contribute to its future. As a director, it is easy to get distracted by your own objectives but in the present economic climate it is more important than ever that staff are kept informed about changes in circumstances – including how new legislation could affect the company. Henry Braithwaite, Operations Director of Market Makers, recommends twice weekly meetings “when the whole company comes together and shares the successes of the week and what is going on in the company as a whole” as well as an “open door policy” to the manager’s office. Simply showing employees that they are being listened to can be enough to boost morale.

9) Be flexible

Whilst all companies need employment agreements in place to set standards, be prepared to be flexible to reasonable requests for additional leave. Respect that your employees have personal lives to balance with their work commitments and don’t put additional pressure on them when, for example, they have to pick up their children, take care of a sick relative or leave early for a washing machine to be delivered. To avoid completely forfeiting their labour, assist employees with flexible working by helping them to receive their work e-mails on their smartphone or home computer. If you want to be particularly generous, IT company acs365 recommends offering staff additional leave on their birthday. “As part of your commitment to acknowledging the importance of work-life balance, a paid day off is the best present you can provide to staff. This type of initiative helps to create a positive work culture, improving and uplifting staff morale,” a spokesperson says.

10) Get the little things right

Sometimes getting the little things right is more influential than an occasional grand gesture. It is easy to underestimate the importance of basic essentials for a positive working environment. These may include well-maintained toilets, basic kitchen facilities and filtered tap water – conveniences that don’t cost the earth. “It is often possible to quickly fix many of the day-to-day gripes that bother your employees. Listen to what your employees are saying about their workplace and concentrate on these first,” says Laetitia Monereau, head of HR at Simply Business. “You need not spend a vast sum of money improving your staff morale.”

Five ways to keep your staff happy that work

12 Jan

Real Business 12/01/2010

on-strike-sign1-thumb-200x120Tube workers have threatened to strike on the day of the royal wedding. Here’s how to make sure your employees stay off the picket lines in 2011.

Strikes and unrest are fuelling our national psyche of late, which spells trouble for employers. Poor pay is the justification for bin men leaving rubbish on the streets, Heinz workers canning it for the day and Newsquest Media Group failing to make the news. Of course, with the 2011 economic forecast looking challenging, businesses should not become complacent when it comes to their employees but, in my experience, employee happiness does not start and end with pay.
There are two schools of thought as to how to analyse striking staff. The first is that if your employees are willing to strike, they are not worth keeping. The second is to ask yourself if your duty as an employer is falling short – would you really want to work for you?

Solving unrest, griping staff or malcontent needs strong leadership but it doesn’t necessarily require heaps of time or cash; most employees aren’t just in it for the money. So here are five pearls of accumulated wisdom on the simple ways to ensure your employees stay off the picket lines in 2011.

1. Make sure you are the right company for your employees. It is all very well recruiting individuals you consider to be perfect, but the feeling must be mutual. If your company is not right for them, your staff will remain dissatisfied and unproductive. If you nail your recruitment strategy from the outset, you can attract employees who see a future with your company, rather than wage slaves whose only concern is pay day. I offer all new starters £1,000 to leave after two weeks if they don’t think we’re the right company for them. It saves a lot of wasted time and investment on both sides in the long run.

2. Give your workforce a voice. Encouraging your employees to contribute their opinions and ideas to the business not only unveils brilliant ideas but ensures the “team” actually feels like one. You could give your staff a quota to suggest two business improvements per month. If the cost is less than £100, let them go ahead and make improvements for the greater good. It will never cost any more than this in goodwill or settlements.

3. Make the workplace a positive space. Offices are the voluntary equivalent of a prison cell – sterile, cramped and claustrophobic environments in close quarters with people you may or may not enjoy sharing personal space with, never mind a conversation. Making your workspace more aesthetically agreeable improves employee productivity and efficiency. I’m not suggesting you bulk-buy the beanbags immediately, but employee involvement in improving the workplace is a small gesture that gets bigger returns. Our offices now have a miniature golf course and Nintendo Wii when it’s time for the staff to take five, and turnover at our place is definitely up and not down.

4. Small but effective perks. Pay rises are not always the best incentive for employees. Regular and thoughtful perks can be really effective. “Free Food” day on the last day of the month is quick and easy, beer o’clock on a Friday always welcomes the weekend in and free use of the mooring outside our office goes down well too.

5. When it’s not right, it’s just not right. Employers (not employees) are the cardinal sinners of failing to address the reality of working relationships. So introduce a weekly happy check – ask your employees to rate their happiness on a scale from one to three, and then speak to people if they are unhappy. It prevents problems escalating and lets your workforce know you care about their well-being. However, people are all different and sometimes, despite everyone’s best intentions, it just isn’t going to work. Employers convince themselves it might get better; trust me, it won’t. This year, businesses need to have an honest look at their teams – are they full of people you’d go to the pub with for a pint? If not, the fit isn’t right and these staff aren’t adding value in the right way to your customers. Take courage and confront the situation to do both sides a favour.

Making your company a desirable place to work is not rocket science, but it is how you keep staff happy and motivated. Simple changes can transform uninspired and bored employees into happy and productive ones. At the end of the day, your employees are not robots; work needs to be enjoyable. Find the key to this and your staff will never prefer to strike again, even without a pay rise.

Dominic Monkhouse is managing director of PEER 1 Hosting

Related articles

Offering a grand to quit and cock-up of the month – how I built my dream team

16 Jun
Coloured pencils 

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16 June 2010 by Sophie http://www.smarta.com/blog/2010/6/guest-blog-offering-a-grand-to-quit-and-cock-of-the-month—how-i-built-my-dream-team

Dominic Monkhouse is the UK managing director of web hosting business PEER 1, where he’s recruited more than 20 people since joining. He shares his most effective – and often unconventional – tricks for finding and keeping great talent.

Ask interviewees to draw a picture

The first thing I do when I interview people is hand them a blank piece of paper and a bunch of coloured pencils and ask them to draw whatever motivates or inspires them. The first part of the interview is talking about that. I didn’t even take cv’s into the 15 interviews I did last week. A cv is just an indicator the person’s got the technical abilities to do the job. It doesn’t say anything about them.

I always ask people what they like doing outside work. I’m not going to hire someone who can only say, “I like to spend time with my family” – how dull! I don’t want dull people to work for me, because my customer would find them boring too.

Get people inside and outside the company to help interview

I interview every single person we hire. I owe it to staff and customers to hire good people. But I get the other staff involved in interviewing too. Everyone is looking for the same thing, the same energy. We look for people who are self-motivated and have passion, who can take the initiative.

You can get another business owner or entrepreneur to interview alongside you. It really helps because sometimes you’re so vested in wanting to hire someone, you end up just hiring the least worst person you see. It helps to have someone who doesn’t have emotional interest in the business there to see things objectively. For example, I’ve used marketing agency bosses to hire marketing people before. The candidates don’t mind. It might be a bit more intimidating for them, but I’m not looking for someone who’s easily intimidated.

Ability testing

As well as phone and face-to-face interviews, we use strength finder tests, so we know the person can do the job and get on with it. So we’ll test for a sense of responsibility, which means they self-manage. We look for achiever strength, which means they don’t just want to go and lie on the beach.  Buy a book called Strengthsfinder 2.0 – it talks you through the test and what strengths you should look for in each role. You use a code in the back which gives you access to the test. We buy 15 or 20 at a time, for around £7 each. The cost is worth it.

Offer people £1,000 to quit

Within the first two weeks of joining a company an employee knows whether they’ve made a mistake and if the company’s not right for them. But the employer can’t tell that. So we offer new recruits £1,000 to walk away after those first two weeks. If they don’t take it, it means they’re happy, so you know it’s the right decision. But it means they’re forced to think about it.

If you don’t try to have that conversation that early on, the next break point is after three months, when you’ve realised the person isn’t right. The cost of finding someone again is huge. And it might be that the next person isn’t right, and the person after that – in which case it could be nine months before you find the right person.

The two-week idea saves you the three months trying to work out if the person’s right, and if you have to spend that £1,000, it’s money well spent. It means you can crack on. Although no one’s ever taken the money and left us yet!

Keeping good people: cock of the month

I want to keep my team happy. So I give them free breakfast, free fruit in the office, we have Beer Fridays (free beer!), a mini-bar, a dartboard, a Wii. We have free food day the day before payday, when everyone’s skint.

We always talk about the state of our finances, which is something too many small businesses are nervous about doing. It should be transparent – it makes the team feel part of creating the success.

We celebrate our failures as well as our successes. We have a ‘cock of the month’ award for the biggest mistake made. It’s an actual model of a cock – or a rooster, I should probably say! I’ve won it myself before.

The little black book

You go to other people’s offices where a chair’s broken in the meeting room because no one thinks it’s their job to fix it – it just creates a bad impression.

So everyone gets a little black book when they start. You write in it the stuff we should change, things you don’t think work in the company. But I don’t have time to fix all those things – so I tell the team that if it costs less than £100 to fix, and it makes the business a better place to work, just expense it and do it. Once every six months we sit down and look at everyone’s black books and share them to fix the bigger problems in the company.

Keep finding ideas

Lots of ideas I get come from other companies I’ve visited or work with. Or ones I’ve spotted in ‘best companies to work for’ lists – you just give them a call and ask if you can see how things are done. You just need to keep bringing in ideas that work for other businesses.

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